An Introduction to Aesthetics (Introducing Philosophy)

Description

This volume is a fascinating introduction to the core themes and basic methods of aesthetics and the philosophy of art. Providing an analytic and historical treatment of the issues, and including many illustrative examples to both motivate and reinforce theoretical discussion, An Introduction to Aesthetics is the ideal course book for the philosophical novice.Beginning with definitions of aesthetic questions and language, the author then goes on to examine relations between artist, work of art and audience, whilst throughout developing three important aesthetic theories which compete for philosophical attention: participatory aesthetics, aesthetic experience, and theory of response and institutional activity. In this way, the author encourages an understanding of aesthetic theory, whether, and to what extent, it is possible, and what the alternatives might be. The book also includes an appendix (containing the texts referred to in the book), a comprehensive glossary and further reading suggestions to help the student reader develop a deeper comprehension of the field.

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About Author

Dabney Townsend is Professor of Philosophy and Chair of the Department of Philosophy and Humanities at the University of Texas at Arlington. He has written extensively in the field of aesthetics, particularly on the developments in aesthetics in the eighteenth century, and has recently edited Aesthetics: Classic Readings in Western Tradition (1996).

Contents

Introduction. 1. Language About Art and Aesthetics. Getting Started. Aesthetic Predicates. Criticism and Value Terms. The Problem of Definition. 2. Aesthetic Analysis and Its Objects. Formal Analysis. Aesthetic Objects. 3. The Artist and the Work of Art. The Artist's Intentions. Inspiration. Creativity and Originality. Breaking the Connection Between Artist and Art. 4. The Audience and the Work of Art. Attitudes of the Audience. Critics and Criticism. Institutions and the Role of the Audience. 5. The Artist and the Audience. The Aesthetics of Reception. Mythpoesis: Myth and Ritual. Institutional and Post-Institutional Aesthetics. Appendix. Glossary. Index.